I spent some time around the roundabout that day. It happened last year, the bearish 2024. In winter. In the mildly cold and deeply boring January of southern Istria.
I had to do some work in the city, and I had an hour or so of free time in between whatever I was doing, and what isn't relevant for this post. Anyway, I decided to take a walk around one of the neighborhoods on the outskirts of Pula, the city in question.
Pula, it's a small city, only about fifty to sixty thousand souls are eating, shitting, and crawling there, and it is the nearest city to the lovely, tourism-oriented hotel town where I live, a nice sunny place that is getting cleaner and more boring with each new year.
The neiberhood I'm showcasing here is called Shiana. I mean, you won't see the entire thing, Shiana covers a pretty large chunk of the city's suburbs. Both residential and industrial architecture can be found there.
In this post, the focus is on the area around one of the road junctions in Shiana.
That intersection is the largest roundabout in the city; no other roundabout in Pula comes close to its size. In the above photograph, you can see the massive rail around it.
It's a nice example of contemporary urban design.
The barrier around the roundabout resembles a modern geometric sculpture.
This is a photograph I took on the way to the roundabout, about a kilometer from it. It shows the trees in the forest park Shiana.
With this shot, we are near the roundabout again.
This is an area I often drive through. The day these photographs were taken was the first time I stopped to explore the place through the lens of my camera.
There is a pretty large park there.
A park I have never visited before.
It's a new park, so the trees are still small. The roundabout was ready in 2017. I think the park was finished some years later.
This is one of the few plants that are abundantly present in the park.
Lavender.
This wide shot shows how the plant looks in its suburban habitat, surrounded by roads, cars, and billboards.
The fragrant twigs were covered with dew.
Here you can see the giant poppies that grow along the roads all around the roundabout.
These street lamps are meant to be stylized versions of poppies that glow in the dark.
Here you can see a bit of traffic around the roundabout.
In this shot, I zoomed in on some block buildings of Shiana and the fairly tall tower of one of the local supermarkets. You can find quite a few of those in the area near the roundabout.
Here you can take a look at some of the much smaller houses situated behind the park. In the following photograph ...
... I zoomed in on one of the buildings in that area. The small, fairly recent metal addition to an old, gray house makes it stand out from neighboring ones.
Here you can see a detail from a more vivid facade.
You can see plenty of contrast and architectural diversity in this neiberhood.
This is the park again. I don't know what the circular thing, shown in the foreground of this photograph, is. It looks like a large pipe. Or more like a large but short section of a pipe.
Here you can see it from a different angle.
This is a detail from the garbage can.
One of the five or six black metal garbage cans in the park.
The ashtray looks like a pocket.
Here you can see it from above.
Here you can see two more houses behind the park.
These chimneys are from the same area.
Here you can see one of the more distant houses. It's a bigger building with more apartments, but the shape of the house isn't much different.
This photograph shows one of the side streets taht lead deeper into the area behind the park.
At some point, while wandering around, I came across this recently constructed blocky building. Between it and another just slightly less blocky big house ...
... there was this disheveled litlle ruin that evokes a different period.
Contrasts always look great in a photograph.
Yep, they do, there's no doubt about it.
You can take another look down the street in this shot. I included the morning sun in the picture, so the camera settings had to be quite different. The result is a photograph that stands out from most of the stuff you've seen in this post so far.
These flower buds belong to one of the Oxalis debilis plants ...
... that were growing at the base of one of the garden walls by the side of the road.
Here you can take a better look at the dew-covered leaves.
If you take time to explore the details in this shot, you'll surely notice an aphid posing on one of the two flower buds.
Here, I zoomed in on some houses and bigger buildings further down the street, and then, less than a minute later ...
... my camera caught the only human being out in the street in that moment in that part of the neiberhood.
This chimney was taller than any chimney I saw that morning. That's why it ended up in today's post.
Here you can see some ordinary garbage cans.
Green, blue, and yellow. They look a bit like the colored fields in a flag, or something similar. The green one holds the general garbage. The blue one is for paper only. The yellow is for plastic. In the following photograph ...
... you can see them posing in the suburban scenery. I find those garbage cans quite decorative.
This is just another ordinary facade from that area.
This scene was photographed much closer to the roundabout.
And that's it. The post ends here. As always on Hive, the photographs are my work.